November 28, 2013 10:47am ESTNovember 27, 2013 10:57am ESTHow did Jimmie Johnson win his Sprint Cup title? By winning six races. By leading more laps than any driver. And by completing every lap of the Chase. SN's Bob Pockrass goes inside the numbers.

6 — Yes, that’s the number of championships. But it’s also the number of wins Johnson had in 2013. He swept both races at Daytona and also won at Martinsville in April and Pocono in June before winning two races in the Chase — at Dover and Texas.

8 — Johnson earned his eighth career Cup win at two tracks — Martinsville and Dover. He's third on the all-time win list at Martinsville, trailing Richard Petty (15) and Darrell Waltrip (11). He's the all-time winningest driver at Dover, just ahead of Bobby Allison and Petty (both with seven).

9.833 — Average starting position for the season.

10.694 — Average finishing position for the season.

11.1 — The percentage of laps that Jimmie Johnson had the fastest speed, the highest of any driver on the circuit.

14 — With the win at Pocono, it marked the 14th time Johnson has won when starting from the pole. This technically wasn’t an “earned” pole because the field was set by owner points as rain washed out practice and qualifying.

16 — The number of top-five finishes, tied with Kyle Busch for most on the circuit.

17 — Laps led in the Daytona 500, which Johnson won for the second time, becoming one of 10 drivers to win NASCAR's biggest race more than once.

23 — Number of races where Johnson led at least one lap. He failed to lead just 13 of 36 races.

24 — The number of top-10 finishes, the most of any driver on the circuit.

27 — Number of races where Johnson left as the series points leader. He led for 23 of the first 25 weeks and four of the last five.

30 — Length, in seconds, of the “Harlem Shake” video done by Jimmie Johnson and his team after they won the Daytona 500.

36 — Johnson’s average finish during a horrendous four-race stretch leading into the Chase. He finished 40th at Michigan, 36th at Bristol, 28th at Atlanta and 40th at Richmond. In the other 32 races during the season, Johnson averaged a finish of 7.53.

48 — The most points a driver can earn during a race — a win is worth at least 47 points, 48 if a driver leads the most laps. In five of Johnson’s six victories, he earned 48 points.

100 — Percentage of laps Johnson completed in the Chase. While he completed every lap of all 10 Chase races, he only completed every lap in 18 of the first 26 races of the season.

110.3 — Johnson’s driver rating for the season, just behind Matt Kenseth’s 110.9. Driver rating is a formula NASCAR uses that takes into account average running position, average speed, laps led, fastest laps, etc., with a maximum of 150.

846 — Laps led in the Chase. That’s 26.7 percent of all the laps in the final 10 races.

1,985 — Laps led during the season (18.81 percent of all laps). He led 202 more laps than the next driver on the list: Matt Kenseth (1,783). Oh, those 1,985 laps equated to 2,764 miles (19.76 percent of all miles) — more than 500 more miles than any competitor.

1,039,175 — Winning purse for Johnson and his team for winning the Sprint All-Star Race.

1,525,275 — Winning purse for Johnson and his team for winning the Daytona 500.

8,986,750 — Total race winnings for Johnson and the No. 48 team. That likely will grow by about $6 million next week when the season-ending bonus money is announced.